A journey towards marriage should ideally feel like a fresh start, brimming with promise and anticipation. However, in “Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen,” each mile covered seems to propel the protagonists closer to an outcome that hangs precariously in the balance. There’s no distinct moment where everything unravels; instead, the pervasive sense that something is deeply wrong permeates the atmosphere, subtle yet persistent, much like an undeniable background noise that’s impossible to ignore.

